Kasey Kahne hopes Brickyard win can save his job with Hendrick

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LONG POND, Pa. -- Kasey Kahne was busy celebrating his win in the Brickyard 400 and missed his team owner state plans are not set for the No. 5 car next season.

You know, Kahne's ride. The one he's under contract to drive in 2018.

"I didn't hear that until I got home," Kahne said.

But there was little need for a spoiler alert warning on team owner Rick Hendrick's news.

"I pretty much knew it," Kahne said, laughing. "There's not a lot you can do. I'm signed there through 2018 and it's up to him what I do next year and the rest of

this year. I want to race and I love racing. There's a lot of people at Hendrick Motorsports that I enjoy and like working with and things. I love racing and hopefully I can win a lot more before it's done."

Kahne's future driving the No. 5 Chevrolet beyond this season remains murky, even with his milestone victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He made the traditional kiss of the bricks and spent the week celebrating with friends and his crew. His team even lined up some bricks back at the team shop and let employees who didn't make the trip pucker up and kiss 'em.

His losing streak was over. Some of the angst over his middling season evaporated, too.

"Yeah, for me," he said. "It's good for our team, as well, and our future. Who knows? It's definitely good for our future."

Is win one at the Brickyard really enough to save his job?

Kahne's fate has been in limbo for most of the season because of run-of-the mill finishes and sponsorship woes.

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Farmer's Insurance bailed on Kahne and Great Clips also cut ties with the driver. Great Clips was actually signed as the primary sponsor for 10 races annually through the 2018 season. But that deal ended early -- and so could Kahne's run with Hendrick.

"There's nothing concrete or done and that hasn't changed," Hendrick said in Indianapolis. "We'll see how things shake out at the end of the year."

William Byron, the 19-year-old sensation and Hendrick prospect, has dominated the Xfinity series and joins Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman in the four-car stable next year.

Without that needed infusion of sponsorship dollars, Kahne could find himself elsewhere in 2018.

But there are few quality options. Richard Childress Racing saw Paul Menard leave for Wood Brothers Racing and there's no guarantee RCR's third entry will be filled in 2018. Stewart-Haas Racing could have openings if Danica Patrick and Kurt Busch leave. Matt Kenseth, the 2003 champion, also is on the market because Joe Gibbs Racing replaced him in '18 with Erik Jones.

Almost three years -- a stunning dry spell for once one of the top young drivers in NASCAR.

He won as many as six races in 2006 driving for Ray Evernham and finished as high as fourth in the standings in 2012 driving for Hendrick. He won two races in 2013, won Aug. 31, 2014 at Atlanta Motor Speedway for career victory No. 17 and then -- nothing.

Kahne slumped and had back-to-back winless seasons for the first time in his career. He opened this season with a seventh-place finish in the Daytona 500 and was fourth in Atlanta and seemed to show he might have returned to form. But his success was just a flicker and he crashed out of five races and failed to finish better than 15th in the nine races leading into Indianapolis.

"We didn't have the fastest car on Sunday, but we had a really good car and our strategy worked out perfect," he said. "Usually our strategy doesn't work. That strategy worked, so we ended up in victory lane. It's tough."

He has two career wins (2008, 2013) at Pocono Raceway and a third could make a decision for Hendrick that much tougher.

Kahne reveled in the spoils of victory. He'd rather enjoy some job security.

"I had a lot of fun and did some media stuff, TV and also radio and things, things that I hadn't done a lot of lately," he said. "It was good to be part of all that again."

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